National Council of Schools and Programs of Professional Psychology



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Practica
Administration of Practica: The DCT along with training faculty develops and maintains quality practicum sites. Administering and developing a practicum program can be the most time-consuming part of the DCT’s job. In some programs, the DCT or Associate Director of Clinical Training, or other training faculty to sites takes on this responsibility to coordinate placements with students’ training needs in both internal and external practicum sites.
It is advisable for the DCT or other training faculty to be very involved in administering a practicum placement program. Leaving students to fend for themselves in locating sites is potentially disastrous, both for the individual student and the program. Ensuring appropriate supervision is an important consideration and one that students may not attend to as closely when there is a need to secure funding or a practicum slot. It is recommended that the DCT and other training faculty maintain open lines of communication with external practicum supervisors and agency administrators. Having a long-term working relationship with training sites can be advantageous to all involved (Kennedy & McNeil, 1996; McNeil & Carter, 1996). Some programs appoint external practicum supervisors as adjunct faculty and sponsor a once-per-year meeting including continuing education opportunity or other activities or benefits. A practicum fair during which students can meet with site directors is also valuable.
Coordinating the practicum program involves considerable contact with students to ascertain their training needs and personal wishes, and supporting students to match as closely as possible to the available or potential positions. Developing criteria for assignment of such positions is highly desirable so that the process is fair and transparent.
Supervision of Practicum
The DCT and training faculty often have much interaction with supervisors and training directors of practicum and internship sites. The training office, in close consultation with the program, needs to establish guidelines and requirements for supervision and training for practicum. For example, what are the minimum requirements or guidelines for individual supervision, group supervision, didactic training, case conferences, administrative time, and expected direct service hours? What are the policies for different levels of licensing for different levels of training? Will it be required to have a licensed psychologist as primary individual supervisor? What will the role be of other licensed mental health professionals? What are criteria for exceptions to these policies?
This is not the place to give a course in supervision, but we will briefly note some key issues to consider when working with supervisors that often come up:

  • Boundaries need to be addressed due to dual roles or otherwise overlapping responsibilities for student evaluations.

  • Encouraging supervisors to orient trainees to the context of their organization, the organizational structure and culture, and how these issues will affect client treatment is important as well.

  • Supervisors need to be provided resources as well as awareness of current APA guidelines particularly around the need for training in Evidence Based Treatments and Empirically Validated or Supported Treatments, the use of outcome measures, and the need for direct observation and/or video recording of trainees’ work.

  • The APA Ethics Code, state law, multicultural guidelines, and State Board of Psychology requirements need to be a part of supervisory training.

  • Training for supervisors needs to include relationship issues concerning:

    • How an individual student learns best;

    • Developing a collaborative relationship;

    • Clarifying the training goals for the period of the practicum or internship;

    • How evaluations will be done and what rubrics, scales, or behavioral indicators will be used to assess student competencies;

    • Awareness of how power differentials and shame affect supervisory relationship; how professionalism will be evaluated as well as clinical skill level;

    • Use of personal information about the student;

    • And how diversity awareness is engaged and evaluated.

Feedback and Consultation to Sites and Supervisors

DCTs and the training faculty are in a unique position to receive feedback about training from students, supervisors, and agencies. The question is raised thought about how and when DCT should provide feedback back to agencies and supervisors about quality, training, and student issues. Feedback can be divided into three main areas:

1) Feedback to sites about general training issues.

2) Feedback to the site regarding specific areas of concern regarding supervision.

3) Engaging sites in addressing specific concerns about specific students either from the student, agency, program, or mutual concerns.

Feedback to the sites generally is best when it comes from the perception of multiple trainees over time. However, when a site takes 1-2 students at a time, it could be years before there is enough data to be representative. If a serious or obvious concern is raised it may have to be addressed directly early on, but care should be taken to be sensitive to student concerns about privacy and being in an evaluative position at the agency where the student may fear retaliation or a bad evaluation or poor letter of recommendation; while these fears are rarely justified, they must still be taken seriously since the student may have legitimate concerns. However, often what is called for is simply helping to facilitate a dialogue between the student and the supervisor or clarifying the supervisor’s expectations and the student’s needs. If an issue is egregious, for example, not providing supervision, then direct and immediate discussions and reinforcement of agreements is needed. When giving feedback to sites about the quality or amount of training, several factors can be kept in mind:



Sensitivity to students when feedback is given to sites: Giving feedback to sites with problems is a difficult issue that programs struggle with. There is a need to be protective of past and current students at a site, to offer feedback that reflects the concerns of multiple trainees over time, but also the need to give timely feedback to sites and supervisors. This becomes the art of being a DCT!

Relationship with sites: Emphasize how the program values the ongoing relationship with the site, and acknowledge the site’s strengths.

Feedback about students: Ask site for feedback about students and discuss what sort of student is the best fit with the site.

Consultation with sites and students: Acknowledge the challenges and dilemmas inherent in being a supervisor, and offer ongoing consultation to a supervisor who is having difficulty working with a student. This is a “two-way street” dialogue, not a lecture or top-down relationship; we are engaging other professionals in dialogues to find solutions based on common goals and to find resolutions to solve problems where goals and perceptions conflict.

Student concerns about supervision and sites: These situations where students have site and/or supervision concerns are a critical time to support students in learning and growing as professionals regarding communication, solving problems, and setting appropriate boundaries as well as taking appropriate responsibility for their part in the matters at hand. DCTs can encourage students to advocate for their training needs at sites at the earliest time when problems become apparent – especially at the midyear review, which should be a two-way conversation. Students should be talked to early on about APA guidelines on informal conflict resolution as well as the need to bring problems to the school when they are serious or persist despite attempts to solve them. Most often, merely discussing the issue with students can support them to go back to the training site with ways to solve the problem, but sometimes it calls for contacting the site directly to discuss the problems and sort out solutions. In worse-case and rare scenarios, a student may be pulled from a training site mid-year and the site may not be used again (i.e., failure to provide training or supervision, egregious behavior, lack of responsiveness to working with DCT).

Routine ways to collect feedback about training sites:



  • Yearly student survey on sites and their supervision experiences regarding quality, support, and concerns. Collect these surveys over time and observe patterns that can be followed up on at site visits and routine contacts.

  • Routine sites visits to practicum from DCT or training faculty and staff with phone and electronic contact.

  • Feedback about a specific supervisor or student issue can be dealt with more directly and immediately through solution focused conflict resolution meetings, but the more amorphous or widespread site issues can be dealt with over time in the context of the ongoing relationship with the site.

APA Supervision Guidelines: The publication of APA’s Guidelines for Clinical Supervision in Health Service Psychology (1/15 American Psychologist) Guidelines talk about many key responsibilities of supervisors including:

  • Coordinating with other professionals (i.e., the doctoral program) responsible for the supervisee’s education and training;

  • Creating (through a supervisory contract) and maintaining a collaborative relationship with supervisees;

  • Regularly reviewing both the progress of the supervisee and the effectiveness of the supervisory relationship and addressing issues that arise in a timely manner;

  • Modeling professionalism;

  • Using live observation or review of recorded sessions;

  • Using remediation plans where needed.

Tracking student practicum experiences: It is recommended that DCTs advise their students to keep track of their clinical experiences from their first day of graduate school (and remind them to do so annually) since internship applications require detailed reports of practicum activities. There are a couple of computer-based systems for tracking practicum hours: 1) Time2Track is commercially available and is a full service tracking program for a small yearly fee; 2) APPIC provides MyPsychTrack (MPT) for this same purpose. The MyPsychTrack is planned to be re-launched in 2015 and will eventually track hours from beginning graduate training through internship selection, postdoctoral hours, and licensure. MPT is free for students and academic programs.
It is equally important to help students choose practicum sites that will help them be competitive for the internship sites they want (e.g., if they want to intern in a community mental health center, it is helpful for them to have one or two practicum experiences in a community mental health center, or at least to have worked with patients presenting with severe and chronic mental illness). Of course, most students don’t know what type of internship they would like to have, before, or even early on in the program. The heavy emphasis on internship leads some students to be very narrowly focused on the end goal internship, so much so that they forget that they actually have several years of practicum where they are building key skills for internship and the rest of their careers.
Internships
Advising: Advising students who are applying to internship is extremely important, particularly given that these students are at a very critical and vulnerable time in their career. Significant anxiety is typical, and the DCT will probably want to help address unproductive concerns by providing highly relevant amounts of information and support.
Meeting with students who will be applying is essential; typically, group meetings are held for efficiency with follow-up with particular students. In some programs, a class or support groups are offered that focus on professional issues including internship, postdoctoral, and career issues. It is recommended that the DCT first meet with students in the spring prior to internship applications in the fall. Preparation for the internship experience, however, should occur even earlier and be integrated into the fabric of the clinical program. With increasing numbers of applicants, despite an increasing number of internship sites, competition for internships is high, as is students’ anxiety.
Resources: A key recommended resource for internship preparation and the application process is the latest version of: Internships in psychology: The APAGS workbook for writing successful applications and finding the right fit (Williams-Nickelson, Prinstein, & Keilin, 2012). There are many other online tip resources through APA, APPIC and private websites.
Good fit: In general, a successful internship match requires “good fit” between the candidate and the site. Most internships will require relevant hours as an important part of fit (i.e., practicum or program sanctioned hours accrued in a setting that is similar or highly relevant to the internship setting). Internships are mostly interested in direct service hours (face to face assessment and intervention hours) with each site having a different and unique emphasis on what is preferred or required. For example, in general, hospitals and medical sites will require considerable assessment hours and integrated psychological reports; on the other hand, university counseling centers may require considerable intervention hours, but not as many assessment hours or integrated reports.
Applying for Internship: It takes considerable time for students to thoroughly go through the APPIC Directory Online, search for sites using various criteria, then visit individual sites’ webpages to get more detailed information. Once students identify at least approximately 15 “good fit” sites to apply to (recommended by APPIC) they will also need to write strong cover letters, CVs, and essays. Cover letters in particular are personalized for each site, and the DCT (and/or faculty members, and writing centers if available on campus) can be helpful to students with this.
AAPI (www.appic.org): The APPIC Application for Psychology Internships (or AAPI Online) has a student portal for applicants to enter and upload elements of the application. It is advisable that DCTs review the AAPI Online with students to ensure that there is consistency in how they complete the various sections. The AAPI also has a DCT portal within which the DCT must verify certain information about each applicant’s status, indicate that the faculty have approved the student to apply to internship, and provide other information including statements of each student’s strengths and areas for further development.
When utilizing APPIC, it is important that DCTs keep abreast of current APPIC policies and procedures. A copy of APPIC’s current policies and procedures is located on the APPIC website (www.appic.org). It is recommended that the DCT encourage potential applicants to visit the APPIC Directory Online multiple times in order to find at least 15 potential internship sites that are a good fit for them.
The internship process is fraught with dilemmas of life and career choices and ethical dilemmas which students are, typically and naturally, not prepared for. Ethical breaches by students are rare, but transgressions in professional or other interpersonal interactions can affect not only the students involved, but also future generations of students applying to a particular internship site. If a student experiences ethical breaches by a site, either during the selection process or while during internship or postdoctoral fellowship, the DCT should encourage them to deal with the situation, seek consultation, and if needed, file an Informal Problem Consultation request with APPIC. The DCT and training faculty will need to serve support and problem-solving roles in these situations.
Non-accredited internships: It is also important for DCTs to let their students know the potential negative implications with regard to licensure and career choices if they match with a non-accredited internship. The field is increasingly moving in the direction of requiring accreditation for doctoral programs and internships; as a small example, it is already virtually impossible for a student graduating from an internship that is not accredited to ever get a postdoctoral fellowship or job in a VA, even though the VA is the largest employer of psychologists in the U.S. Currently, the CoA has a guideline that each program place at least 50% of their students at APA accredited internships; those that fall under this criteria are reviewed by the CoA as part of the accreditation process. Of course, currently, match rates nationwide for all doctoral students combined is not quite at 50% when all APPIC, APA, CAPIC, and other intern applicants are considered, making this a challenging and stressful task for programs, students, sites, and the training office.
Deadlines regarding internship: One of the challenges encountered by DCTs and clinical programs is having deadlines, which the student must meet in order to apply for internship. Some programs require that students successfully defend their dissertation proposal prior to making application for internship. Such deadlines seem to be a very good idea, and can help to alleviate the ABD (“all but dissertation”) problem in post internship students. Nevertheless, there is a tendency for students to delay in defending their proposals, which can put a severe time crunch on the DCT and other clinical faculty in late fall (the application deadline for any internships). Students who are applying for internship also often look to the DCT for advice about preparing for interviews or ranking their preferred sites—activities that frequently occur in December and January.
CAPIC: These processes are similar for doctoral programs utilizing the California Psychology Internship Council (www.capic.net) internship application and match process. Similar to the AAPI, CAPIC employs an online CAPIC Universal Application (CUA) that requires a DCT verification called the CAPIC eligibility and Readiness Form (CERF). The DCT portal also contains information on sites to which each student in the program has applied, and allows downloading of the student’s complete application. It is recommended that the DCT ask students where they are offered interviews. A similar recommendation is made regarding participation by CAPIC regarding deadlines, policies, and procedures. If students experience an ethical or policy breach by a site, either during the selection process or while at internship or postdoctoral fellowship, the DCT should encourage them to first seek informal resolution possibilities, but seriously consider contacting CAPIC with a grievance if the matter is not resolved.
Principles and Rules about ranking in multiple matching processes such as APPIC and CAPIC and other internships: Note that both APPIC and CAPIC and other internship processes have strict rules about ranking internships: Once a student ranks an internship, they are committing to attend that internship if indeed they are matched with that internship. Thus, the rule that makes this work is that a student must not rank in more than one process at a time, for example, a student may not rank APPIC sites at the same time they are ranking CAPIC sites. To play it out, if a student ranked in more than one internship process at a time, they would be committing to accept two different internships, which is a contradiction resulting in mayhem and unhappiness all the way around. If the student is participating in multiple internship application processes, they need to be acutely aware of how different match and ranking dates overlap and contradict each other so that they can maintain an ethical and professional approach to this challenging and often difficult process.
APA and Societal Internship Events: In terms of internship information, APA holds a yearly open forum at APA conferences where students can hear from APA internship sites and attend tip sessions with students at APA internships. Other psychological societies sponsor program events at their meetings to bring together internship sites and potential applicants. For example, the Association for Advancement of Behavior Therapy has an internship symposium each year. Various Child Psychology groups (e.g., Division of Clinical Child Psychology, Society of Pediatric Psychology) host an “Internships on Parade” each year at the APA convention for child clinical and pediatric psychology internship programs. Numerous articles and books relating to internship application and acceptance are referenced in the resources section of this manual.
Don’t be surprised when a student comes to you saying, “I heard completely opposite ideas on what I should do with my essays, applications, and so on.” Like most things, such strategies depend on what the student goals are, prior experience, and context factors like competition, ability to move, strengths, and weaknesses, so naturally, there are many different ways to approach each situation.
Prior students who have matched at internships: Students will appreciate the DCT providing them a list of internship sites that have accepted their program’s students. Distributing such a list, perhaps covering the previous five years, can be helpful to your students in guiding them to internships that are a good match for them. It can also be useful to publicize to students the number of hours (including the range) of practicum training that previous successful students have reported on their AAPI form for internship. Students often overestimate the number of hours of experience required to be successful, and seeing this information can be reassuring. Internship sites are generally more interested in “relevant hours” (hours accrued at a practicum setting that is the same or similar as the internship setting) than just raw hours.
Postdoctoral Fellowships and Internships
It has become increasingly important to follow alumni from the program well after graduation, but particularly as students seek out postdoctoral fellowships and internships. Information about their careers will be required for APA accreditation self-study reports. APPIC now offers an online postdoctoral internship application and process. APA PsychCareers also has postdoc and job listings (http://www.apa.org/careers/index.aspx). CAPIC (www.capic.net) also has postdoctoral internship member sites and their profiles and application procedures are publicly found on the CAPIC website. Students may be able to opt to not pursue a formalized postdoctoral fellowship through APPIC or CAPIC membership organization but rather, they may pursue registering as a Psychological Assistant through a state Board of Psychology or seek other less formalized internship training experiences.
There are a handful of states, increasing each year, that do not require a postdoctoral experience and allow students to count relevant supervised practicum training toward the hours required to become licensed psychologists in those states. Make sure to be aware of what the rules are in your state and to assist students in finding out requirements of licensure in other states. While ASPPB (www.asppb.org) is a good resource and has links to each state psychology board, it is always recommended that students (and DCTs) go directly to the website of their particular state/province Board of Psychology for specific licensure requirements.



Section 6 – Students: Support, Development, and Remediation


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